Hailing from Chesterfield Virginia USA, Controlled Kaos delivers freshly chilled vibes with this free release, continuing the trend of great free music from this collective.
Watch out for his fresh plate coming out December 30th entitled ‘Reality’. Listen to a clip here:
And if you weren’t already aware of this, check out the massive free compilation presented by DJ Sashwat from a couple of years back:
This 1 (rave step mix) – Jup1ter
Chicken Run (Panteros666 remix) – Canblaster
Fogs – Kingdom
Just Smile (Hostage remix) – Bondax feat. Bobbie Gordon
I Feel Alright Now – Wachs Lyrical
Ghost – Paper Tiger
Secrets (Blynk Remix) – Numan
Sexy Space Mother – Arkist
Sjambok – Clubroot
Toe To Toe – Clubroot
Darkness Falls – Saviour
Just For You – Untold
Hunted – SPMC & LXOne
Give (Von D remix) – Funk Ethics & Lucid Dream
Woken – Dcult
Icarus – Mykur and TMSV
Unforgiven – Matt-U
Method One – Kaiju
The City – Author
Don’t Make Sense – Kromestar
If I Could Live In That Moment – Kaori Breathe
Fedaykin – TZR
Tenopause – Calibre
Wray & Neph – Mosca
Tripped (Synkro remix) – DFRNT
You’re Right Here – Mr Skank Sinatra
If you are a regular listener to the show you will have heard us banging on about a young mancunian producer named Blynk. We’ve played a few of his tracks on previous shows (check the podcasts section) and his productions speak for themselves, but we wanted to hear what the brain behind the beats has got to say for itself. Robot Bodypop conducts an interrogation…
Why the name, Blynk? Are you particularly photosensitive or twitchy?
Haha, neither really. I used to go under a different alias so I was brainstorming some ideas with Conrank (Rankadank Records) and we were changing letters in words and Blynk came up and it stuck!
What was your first musical purchase?
I really can’t remember. I’ve been through many a genre since I was kid so its hard to tell. The oldest CDs i remember buying were 50 Cent and other similar, I was into HipHop as a teenager.
What would you say is the oddest tune in your collection? Describe what it is you like about it.
Not so much a specific tune, but iv got a great album by a guy called Ronald Jenkees. He used to do videos of himself playing keyboard (insanely sick) and he dropped an album. He’s completely mental in so many ways.. You’ll have to check him out an see for yourself!
With so much to choose from in the world of future music right now, name the tune you are most at this moment in time.
This week iv been rinsing a track called ‘Inha’ by a guy called Cutkachi, very sick producer from Switzerland.
Your first live set was in October. How did that go?
It went pretty good. I dropped tracks that I liked and that I wanted people to hear just to see how it went. Although in all fairness the dance floor was dead until an hour or so later. Im playing the same night again in November so I can really judge how people will take my music in clubs. Manchester locals check out Subtitled!
You have remixed a lot of artists. Who’s next in the pipeline?
Well I’m currently working on an album with eViVE Records so thats taking up a lot of time. Other than that i’ve got about 3 or 4 remixes coming out on various labels over the coming months.
What film score would you like to remake and why?
Hmm thats a hard one, maybe a Batman film?
You’re giving away a lot of great music for free. Why do you think there’s differences in attitudes from producers when it comes to gaining financially for the work they have done?
Its a hard one really. I don’t give away as much music anymore because I think people take it for granted and when you have a release coming, they just want it for free. Most of the music i’ve given away recently has either been remixes of already released tracks or ones from competitions. Its nice to give stuff out though, its built my fan base nicely over the past year. I can understand why some producers don’t like doing it. The value of music has decreased so much over the past few years, its hard to sell in the quantities of say 10 years ago.
Finally, the red pill or the blue pill?
Blue, I like blue.
Watch out for the new album and check Blynk out at the next Subtitled bash.
Ben Starr ups the game in forward thinking music once again with this sick line up headlined by Zombie Disco Squad & Death On The Balcony. Check these videos for an idea of what to expect on the night.
And from the supporting artists:
CHECK OUT ALL THE ABOVE AND MORE ON THE 19TH NOVEMBER @UNITY
Once again taking the unfamiliar, and unpopular route, Samurai Music / Red Seal has created a vinyl only record series for 2011. With the public’s disposable view of music rapidly increasing as we go further and further into the digital age, Horo want to put value back into their released recordings and in turn reward the people that still pay the most for their music. ‘Horo’ was a cloak attached to the back of armour worn by elite Samurai messengers in wartime. Capturing an elite tsukai-ban messenger wearing a horo was a coveted prize.The ‘Horo’ vinyl series is an exclusive limited edition series that will come as a pre cursor to a release by the same artist on Samurai Music or Samurai Red Seal. Samurai Music began it’s output on 10″ singles that identified us strongly, so we are glad to see the return to the 10″ format for these limited collectors items.
Future music at its very experimental best with these two cuts from Tokyo Prose & FIS
2 free downloads this week, both coming out of the shadows with some deep and creeping soundscapes.
First up is a track put forward as part of the Dispatch Recordings Octane and DLR sample pack competition. 40 samples were offered up for producers to make use of and Method One by Kaiju is a big favourite of us here on the Robot Bodypop.